(Ivanhoe Newswire) -- Children in richer nations are more likely
to have allergy-related asthma than their counterparts in poorer
nations.
Researchers arrived at that conclusion after studying more than 50,000
kids from 22 countries, ranging from wealthy European nations to poor
nations in Africa.
Overall, children from rich countries who suffered from allergies were
about four-times more likely to also have asthma as children without
allergies. Kids with allergies who lived in poor countries, however,
were only about 2.2-times more likely to have asthma as non-allergic
kids.
Statistics show the prevalence of asthma symptoms varies widely across
countries, with as much as a 15-fold difference seen between some nations.
The authors of this study report some of that difference may be explained by
the different form asthma may take depending on economic development.
Specifically, allergic kids in poorer nations may be exposed to factors that
protect them from developing asthma. Thus, asthma in those nations is more
likely to be due to a non-allergic cause.
"A wide range of different factors, including nutrition, microbial and
allergen exposure, housing conditions, and exposure to pollutants, and so
forth, may have played a role," study authors write.
The researchers plan more studies to look at other risk factors for asthma,
like diet, rhinitis and eczema, to see if they also differ between richer
and poorer nations.
SOURCE: American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine,
2007;176:565-574